Health Care


NIH-funded Study Finds 2.5 Percent of Americans Have a Food Allergy

An estimated 2.5 percent of Americans--7.5 million people--have at least one food allergy and young black children with asthma appear to be at the highest risk, according to findings from one of the largest food allergy studies to date. The research was conducted by investigators at Johns Hopkins Children's Center, the National Institutes of Health, and other institutions.

The FAA proposed rule will require certificate holders with 10 or more helicopter air ambulances to establish operations control centers.

FAA Publishes New Air Ambulance Regulation

Making certificate holders with 10 or more helicopter air ambulances establish operations control centers is one facet of the proposal, which is intended to make helicopter air ambulance flights safer nationwide.

Obesity Drug Meridia Pulled from Market Due to Heart, Stroke Risks

“Meridia’s continued availability is not justified when you compare the very modest weight loss that people achieve on this drug to their risk of heart attack or stroke,” said John Jenkins, M.D., director of the Office of New Drugs in the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research

10 Prevention Tips for National Breast Cancer Awareness Month

Throughout October, National Breast Cancer Awareness Month, experts from Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and its clinical care partner, the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, are offering a series of weekly research-based tip sheets regarding a variety of topics related to breast cancer, including breast cancer prevention, screening and early detection, treatment, and survivorship.

Rubbermaid Commercial Products Introduces Skin Care System

The new system features moisturizing and antibacterial soaps, sanitizers, and lotions that keep facility employees and guests clean and healthy.

Little evidence of "helicopter shopping" or "call jumping" was found in the GAO review.

GAO Finds Few Problems in Air Ambulance Industry

Little evidence of "helicopter shopping" or "call jumping" was found in the agency's review. Patients being transported increased 35 percent from 1999 through 2008 as the number of air ambulance helicopters increased 88 percent.

Creating Healing Environments with Evidence-Based Design

Such designs reduce staff stress and fatigue, improve patient safety, lower patient stress, and raise overall health care quality.

One-Third of Workers Believe Workplace Hinders Wellness: Survey

“As many of us spend over half of our waking hours at work, the workplace is the ideal setting to encourage behavior changes to minimize a person’s risk of cardiovascular disease," said Dr. Kathryn Taubert, senior science officer for the World Heart Federation.



Study Reveals Inconsistent Reporting of Hospital-Developed Bloodstream Infections

Bloodstream infections are the most common hospital-associated infection (HAI) in pediatric intensive care units (PICU) and a significant source of in-hospital deaths, increased length of stay, and added medical costs.

FDA Approves First Oral Drug to Reduce MS Relapses

Gilenya is the first in a new class of drugs that block some blood cells in lymph nodes, reducing their migration to the brain and spinal cord, which may help with reducing the severity of MS.

New ACOEM Guide Helps Employers Find Care for Injured Workers

The multi-page document provides practical advice, checklists, and other resources and tools to help identify physicians who adhere to best practices and are most likely to provide the best medical outcomes when treating workers’ compensation patients.

FDA Approves New Defibrillators to Treat Heart Failure

The three devices, all manufactured by Boston Scientific Corp., are intended to treat patients with left bundle branch block who have either mild heart failure or heart failure with no apparent symptoms.

The GAO estimated 400,000 concussions occurred during the past three school years.

Athletes, Parents, Groups Line Up in Support of Concussions Bill

A full committee hearing Thursday included a letter from the NFL, a 17-year-old soccer player's story of difficulties caused by her recent concussion, and strong testimony in support of H.R. 6172.

Pharmaceutical Firm to Pay $300 Million for Drug Distribution Violations

The company did not obtain drug approval, increased its distribution of Levothroid rather than scaling down, and ignored a subsequent warning letter to stop the manufacture and distribution of Levothroid.

Media Attention Makes Disease Outbreaks Less Severe

Mathematical biologists tout the benefit of publicly reporting disease outbreaks with the news media and use rigorous mathematical techniques to study the impact of that communication.

The report analyzes the range of respiratory diseases affecting firefighters, with chapters written by experts in the field.

IAFF Report Examines Firefighter Lung Diseases

"Respiratory Diseases and the Fire Service" addresses smoking, pulmonary function testing, World Trade Center responders' respiratory diseases, disaster-related infections, and much more.

The rule requires construction contractors, mine operators, and industrial users to retrofit, repower, rebuild, or replace off-road diesel equipment.

2,000 Construction Letters Urge CARB to Repeal Rule

The Associated General Contractors of America said its California members sent that many letters to the board seeking repeal of the off-road diesel rule, saying it is unnecessary and threatens contractors across the country.

Mental Health Leaves Most Costly Disability to Canadian Employers

Researchers from the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) have calculated the actual cost of mental health leave and found that on average it's double the cost of a leave for a physical illness.

FDA Approves Pediatric Use of Chemical Poisoning Treatment

The Food and Drug Administration has approved the pediatric use of Protopam Chloride (pralidoxime chloride), a drug used to treat poisoning by organophosphate pesticides and chemicals (e.g., nerve agents). The drug is approved to be administered either by intravenous (IV) or intramuscular (IM) injections.

CDC Sponsors Sickle Cell Awareness Month Symposium

September is Sickle Cell Awareness Month. This year marks the 100th anniversary of the seminal case report published in the Archives of Internal Medicine (November 1910) by James B. Herrick titled "Peculiar Elongated and Sickle-Shaped Red Blood Corpuscles in a Case of Severe Anemia."

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